Abrolhos Islands Information Guide

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Abrolhos Islands Information Guide THE ABROLHOS ISLANDS INFORMATION GUIDE MARCH 2015 YOUR LICENCE FEES AT WORK CONTENTS ABOUT THE ABROLHOS .......................................................1 VISITING THE ISLANDS ........................................................7 BOATING AT THE ABROLHOS .............................................11 FISHING AT THE ABROLHOS ..............................................15 ABROLHOS RECREATIONAL FISHING REGULATIONS ...........18 CODE OF CONDUCT ...........................................................20 DIVING AT THE ABROLHOS ................................................24 Long Island Dive Trail .....................................................25 Beacon Island Dive Trail .................................................28 Turtle Bay Dive Trail ........................................................30 Anemone Lump Dive Trail ...............................................32 Coral Patches Dive Trail ..................................................34 Morley Island Dive Trail ..................................................36 Rootail Coral Dive Trail ...................................................38 DIVE WITHOUT DAMAGE – ENJOY THE LIFE OF THE REEF ...........................................40 CODE OF SAFETY ..............................................................41 Cover photo: Department of Fisheries © Shannon Conway ii CONTENTS ABOUT THE ABROLHOS ristine waters, a rich biodiversity of marine and other Pwildlife, historic shipwrecks and their attendant tales of triumph over adversity, and a modern, thriving rock lobster industry are all part of the magic that is the Houtman Abrolhos Islands, as they are officially named. Commonly referred to as ‘The Abrolhos’, the islands are named after Dutch Commander Frederik de Houtman, who came across several of the low-lying, coral reef-fringed islands in June 1619. Photo: Bill Bachman © Department of Fisheries Aerial photograph of Pelsaert group, Abrolhos ABOUT THE ABROLHOS ISLANDS 1 The 122 islands lie 60 kilometres west of Geraldton on Western Australia’s mid-west coast. They are clustered into three main groups – Wallabi, Easter and Pelsaert – and spread from north to south across 100 kilometres of ocean. The islands and their surrounding reef communities are a meeting place for tropical and temperate sea life, forming one of the State’s unique marine areas. The Houtman Abrolhos Islands are an A-Class Reserve managed by the Department of Fisheries for the conservation of flora and fauna, for tourism, and for purposes associated with fishing and aquaculture industries. The waters surrounding the islands have special status as a Fish Habitat Protection Area for the conservation of fish, fish breeding areas and associated aquatic ecosystem, and are popular for aquatic tourism and recreational activities. The Abrolhos lie in the stream of the southward-flowing Leeuwin Current, which funnels warm, low-nutrient, tropical water along the edge of the continental shelf, from the north of the State down the Western Australian coast. The current carries a cargo of larvae, eggs and juveniles of many species of corals and other marine life far south of their usual range. Water temperatures in the current are maintained throughout the winter at around 20 to 22 ºC, enabling corals and tropical species of fish and invertebrates to thrive in latitudes where they normally wouldn’t survive. The Abrolhos Islands’ marine and terrestrial environments are fragile and it is important that visitors and the fishers who temporarily reside there protect them. These natural resources are part of the aquatic heritage of all Australians and are listed on the Register of the National Estate. Visitors are asked to ensure their activities have minimal impact on the islands’ natural environment (see ‘Code of Conduct’ on page 20 in this brochure). 2 ABOUT THE ABROLHOS ISLANDS Wildlife and vegetation The Abrolhos Islands are among Australia’s most important sites for breeding seabirds. Schools of pelagic (fish that live in the surface or middle depths of the ocean) baitfish provide a ready source of food for significant colonies of noddies, shearwaters and terns, which breed and roost in the islands’ mangroves, sand dunes and foreshores. Over two million birds from 35 species breed on the 192 islands, islets and small rocky atolls – a sanctuary free of introduced predators. Capitalising on this bounty of smaller seabirds is the white-breasted or white-bellied sea eagle, a natural predator that occurs here in unusually large numbers. Interestingly, some of these birds, including shearwaters and petrels, nest underground, burrowing into the soft sand to make a cool, protected haven for their young. The islands also mark the northern-most habitat of the Australian sea lion (Neophoca cinerea). Once abundant, the Australian sea lion is now classified as a ‘vulnerable species’. Photo: Department of Fisheries © Shannon Conway Australian sea lions at the Abrolhos ABOUT THE ABROLHOS ISLANDS 3 The Abrolhos Islands are home to an array of protected flora and fauna that have adapted uniquely to the diverse range of island ecosystems and are among Australia’s most important sites for breeding seabirds. These include a subspecies of the lesser noddy that has its only breeding colony in the Abrolhos, which is a protected haven for their young. Around 19 species of land and shore birds are also present at the Abrolhos, with the Abrolhos Islands painted button-quail being notable as it is endemic (found nowhere else) to the Abrolhos. A total of 26 terrestrial species of reptiles, many of which are endemic to the Abrolhos, occur on the islands: 11 species of skink (including the Houtman Abrolhos spiny-tailed skink), seven species of geckos, four species of legless lizard, one species of dragon (the Abrolhos dwarf bearded dragon), one species of elapid (front fanged snake), one species of python and the marine green turtle. Photo: Department of Fisheries © Shannon Conway Green turtle 4 ABOUT THE ABROLHOS ISLANDS Two terrestrial mammal species are found on the Abrolhos Islands: The Tammar wallaby occurs on East and West Wallabi and was introduced to North Island; while the bush rat occurs on West and East Wallabi. Many of the above fauna have special status with either State, or Commonwealth recognition. Scientific interest in these species and their habitats is high and research is undertaken into many aspects of the islands’ wildlife. More information is available from the Maritime Museum of WA in Geraldton. There are over 140 species of native flora at the Abrolhos Islands and all are classified as protected. Some of these are recognised as being of a ‘priority species’ that have very high conservation values. Some of the vegetation communities (groups of plants) habitating the islands are coastal and dune heath, dwarf shrubland, saltlakes and low saltbush flats, mangals (patches of mangrove forest) and eucalypt mallee. Some of these communities are highly sensitive to disturbance and have slow rates of regeneration. Shipwrecks The Dutch East India Company’s vessels, Batavia and Zeewijk, are probably the best known of the Abrolhos wrecks. The Batavia hit Morning Reef, near Beacon Island in the Wallabi Group in 1629, while the Zeewijk was wrecked on Half-Moon Reef in the Pelsaert Group in 1727. Eighteen other historic wrecks have been discovered in Abrolhos waters and many remain undiscovered. Historic wrecks at the Abrolhos are protected under State and Commonwealth law. Geological history The islands of the Abrolhos are geologically diverse, with North Island, the Wallabis’, Rat Island and Gun Island being classified as ‘mainland remnant’ type islands made up of limestone, siltstone, and marls of continental origin that have been isolated by rising sea levels over the last 8,000 - 10,000 years. In contrast, the newly created adjacent islands, such as Long, Suomi and Pelsaert, consist of coral rubble of more recent origin. ABOUT THE ABROLHOS ISLANDS 5 Island industries The Abrolhos Islands’ abundant bird and marine life provided the basis for the guano mining and fishing industries that emerged during Australia’s colonial period. Guano, a fertiliser derived from bird excreta, was mined on a commercial scale from the 1880s to the 1920s, and again in the mid-1940s. Reminders of this industry include stone guano jetties on Pelsaert, Gun and Rat islands, and the foundations of the small gauge railway on Rat and Pelsaert. Mounds of limestone tailings are cast into unusual shapes on Rat and Gun islands. Commercial fishing for trepang (sea cucumber) or beche de mer (Holothuria spp.) was conducted on a small scale at the Abrolhos for a period from the mid-1800s. The Abrolhos Islands were noted as a potential commercial western rock lobster fishing site by the WA Government as early as 1904. Today, the western rock lobster (Panulirus cygnus) is the State’s most valuable commercial fishery. The waters around the Abrolhos are an important lobster-breeding site. Hence, careful management and conservation of the Abrolhos lobster breeding stocks and their habitat are of vital importance to the sustainability of the entire fishery. Around 120 licensed fishers, their families and deckhands take up temporary residence on 22 designated islands to fish commercially for western rock lobster. Pearl farming is another Abrolhos industry. The highly-prized black pearl is produced from hatchery-raised black lipped pearl oysters at eight aquaculture sites in the archipelago. There are also licensed commercial finfish and scallop
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